Drone manufacturer Parrot on Monday announced Parrot Professional — Parrot’s consumer drones (the Disco and the Bebop) repackaged as commercial enterprise products through add-ons like Pix4D and thermal cameras.

The drones target enterprise use cases; the Parrot Bebop-Pro Thermal could enable inspection and thermal detection companies, roofers, plumbers, building workers, and also firefighters, to get thermal and radiometry information. Parrot-Pro 3D Modeling could target real-estate agents and architects who want to create promotional videos or interactive 3D models.

Berkeley-based startup 3D Robotics famously re-positioned itself as an enterprise-focused company. It now sells its Solo drone for upwards of $12,175, repackaged now as an enterprise drone that comes with a Sony R10C camera, gimbal, and one year subscription to Site Scan, a piece of software that calculates and flies a flight path, integrating with Autodesk to create 3D models. 3DR originally positioned itself as a consumer drone company in competition with DJI. The company’s “$100 million blunder based on ineptitude” caused massive layoffs. The once $1,000 Solo drone can now be found on Amazon (without Site Scan of course), for just $260.

But the re-positioning of Parrot, 3DR, Yuneec and Autel is not necessarily a bad move. Parrot has made a number of strategic acquisitions of drone enterprised-focsed companies including Airinov, MicaSense, Pix4D and Sensefly. It’s mixing those technologies with its relatively basic and cheap drones.

It’s also proof that drone hardware is increasingly being democratized. An engineer needing to map a piece of infrastructure or a surveyor looking to analyze their land doesn’t need a drone that costs thousands of dollars. In fact, the drone they’re using might as well also double up as their child’s toy.

Drone software companies like Drone Deploy and Skycatch rely primarily on DJI to carry out their projects, while fewer companies are needing expensive, custom-built drones to do aerial work.